The pcaps would be worthless without a lot of tools to decode them and make sense of the data packets. Does anybody have the software needed to decode them? And can we trust that this software isn't manipulating the analysis?
There's zero evidence Lindell had packet data at all. And Yes, there are experts who could review this data. One of them won $5 million in arbitration because Lindell was offering a reward if anyone could poke holes in his packet data.
Robert Zeidman entered the challenge with a 15-page report that concluded the data from Lindell did not "contain packet data of any kind and do not contain any information related to the November 2020 election."
It seems that the guy Lindell got the data from scammed him, knowing that Lindell wouldn't be able to know the difference. That and the fact he was a known scammer.
Are you not aware Lindell lost a $5 million case about this? This happened a few months ago.
Robert Zeidman, a software detective who literally wrote the book on looking for evidence of wrongdoing in lines of computer code (The Software IP Detective’s Handbook), was awarded US $5 million on 19 April by an arbitration panel for winning the “Prove Mike Wrong” challenge. That is, he debunked a claim made by MyPillow founder Mike Lindell, who insisted that he had data documenting Chinese interference in the 2020 election. Lindell announced the contest during a 2021 so-called cybersymposium in South Dakota. He handed 11 files over to contestants, including binary files, text files, and a spreadsheet, and offered the cash prize to anyone who could prove that the data wasn’t related to the 2020 election.
Zeidman quickly did so, documenting his analysis in a 15-page report and concluding that “the data Lindell provides, and represents reflects information from the November 2020 election, unequivocally does not contain packet data of any kind and do not contain any information related to the November 2020 election.” Zeidman detailed the steps he had taken to analyze the data, ruling out an election connection.
Coming to this conclusion this apparently wasn’t all that hard. Some of the data, Zeidman recently told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, looked like someone had simply typed random numbers; another data set had been created just days before the contest, not before the 2020 election, which was pretty obvious given that creation dates on the files had not been altered.
The pcaps would be worthless without a lot of tools to decode them and make sense of the data packets. Does anybody have the software needed to decode them? And can we trust that this software isn't manipulating the analysis?
There's zero evidence Lindell had packet data at all. And Yes, there are experts who could review this data. One of them won $5 million in arbitration because Lindell was offering a reward if anyone could poke holes in his packet data.
It seems that the guy Lindell got the data from scammed him, knowing that Lindell wouldn't be able to know the difference. That and the fact he was a known scammer.
Are you not aware Lindell lost a $5 million case about this? This happened a few months ago.
https://spectrum.ieee.org/software-detective